Fourth full-page Illustration for Dickens's A Christmas
Carol in Prose: being a ghost story of Christmas, Ticknor and Fields
(Boston), 1869.

For seven years, ever since Ebenezer Scrooge, the surviving
business partner,
acquired Jacob Marley's house, the solitary bachelor has taken the front-door
knocker for granted as he returns from his warehouse at the end of each working
day. As usual, he has taken out his door key and proceeded to place it in the
lock when suddenly he encounters Marley's face superimposed upon the knocker.

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This scene is familiar even to those who have never even read
A Christmas Carol over the past eighty years, ever since cinematic
adaptations have attempted to animate the brass knocker with special effects.
Films have shown the knocker become the face of Michael Hordern (1951)
and Frank Findlay
(1984), among others. Here is the initial realisation of this
celebrated textual
moment, "Marley's Face" in "Stave I. Marley's Ghost," which emphasizes
Scrooge's
sudden shock, communicated by his paralyzed hands, mingled with a look of
curiosity as Scrooge's eyes are riveted on Marley's melancholy countenance:

Marley's face. It was not in impenetrable shadow as the other
objects in the yard were, but had a dismal light about it, like a bad lobster in
a dark cellar. It was not angry or ferocious, but looked at Scrooge as Marley
used to look: with ghostly spectacles turned up on its ghostly forehead. The
hair was curiously stirred, as if by breath or hot-air; and though the eyes
were wide open, they were perfectly motionless. That, and its livid colour,
made it horrible; but its horror seemed to be, in spite of the face and beyond
its control, rather than part of its own expression.

As Scrooge looked fixedly at this phenomenon, it was a knocker
again. [Stave One, "Marley's Ghost"]

Unfortunately Eytinge's realisation has a slightly
cartoonish
look because he has made Marley's face congruent with the scale of the knocker,
and the umbrella which Scrooge carries in the midst of a cold-snap strikes a
false note. Although Scrooge has his key (mentioned specifically in
the text) in
his left hand as he reaches for the door-handle with his right, neither key hole
nor door nob is evident, and the town house's door is but imperfectly sketched
in, with no hint of an area yard in front of the house.